Quantcast
PCWorld.com is upgrading some back-end systems. Some site features, such as user registration, may be temporarily unavailable.

Report: Feds Looking at Apple Stock-option Documents

U.S. investigators probing whether Apple officials falsified documents to increase options profitability, a legal newspaper reports.

Nancy Weil, IDG News Service

  • 0 Yes
  • 0 No

U.S. federal investigators are "looking closely" at stock-option documents that former Apple Computer officials allegedly falsified to boost their own profits, according to the The Recorder legal newspaper.

Revelations regarding past stock-options practices are expected in Apple's delayed annual report due out Friday.

Chief Executive Officer Steve Jobs, who publicly apologized for his actions in an October statement, has hired outside counsel separate from the company's, the newspaper also reported late Tuesday in its online edition.

Background

When its three-month-long internal investigation ended in October, Apple said that it "raised serious concerns" about the actions of two former executives related to accounting, recording and reporting stock-option grants. Citing "people with knowledge of Apple's situation" and "individuals with knowledge of the probe," The Recorder said that the two are Nancy Heinen, former senior vice president and general counsel, and Fred Anderson, former chief financial officer.

Anderson resigned in October as the company announced the internal investigation's end. He said then he believed it was in Apple's best interest for him to resign. Heinen left the company, quietly and without comment, in May. At the time, a company spokesman confirmed she had left, but couldn't say why.

Tuesday's news report sent Apple's (AAPL) share price tumbling this morning, but as the East Coast midday approached, ground was regained.

Other Investigations

Apple is among almost 200 companies that have disclosed internal investigations as well as federal probes by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission or the U.S. Department of Justice, or both, related to stock-options practices, including backdating of options.

No one at Apple, in Cupertino, California, could be reached to comment today. The Recorder quoted a spokesman declining to comment beyond what Apple says in public filings on the matter.

  • Recommend this story?
  • 0 Yes
    0 No

"Report: Feds Looking at Apple Stock-option Documents" Comments

  • Great year-end deals for small business!
  • Get 24/7 live remote AT&T Tech Support 360* service along with select Lenovo* PCs (with Intel® Core™ 2 Duo processors and save up to 200!

    Learn more

  • HP EliteBook* 6930p Notebook with Intel® vPro™ technology and a free HP Basic Docking Station - $641 instant savings!

    Learn more

People who read this also read:

Sponsored Links